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- This documentary let us to relive the challenge of the men behind the 1967 Universal Exposition in Montréal, Canada. By searching trough 80,000 archival documents at the national Archives, they managed to bring light on one of the biggest logistical and political challenges that were faced by organizers during the "Révolution Tranquille" in the Québec sixties. Includes the accounts of the Chief of Advertising Yves Jasmin, and businessman Philippe de Gaspé Beaubien.
- A look at the effects of online misogyny and hatred directed at women.
- -Denis Pantis, the son of a Greek immigrant, became passionate about rock'n'roll in the mid-1950s. His dream? To become the next Elvis. Instead, he was to become the most important record producer in the 1960s. This documentary retraces the career of the man nicknamed "the king of singles". Around him, a new generation of stars, producers, musicians and lyricists would emerge, who together would set up an "independent" record industry like no other in the world.
- The documentary God Save Justin Trudeau follows two political pugilists during their training up until the night of a boxing match that will change their destiny forever.
- You think Quebeckers are the only Canadians who aspire to independence? Wrong. There are separatists all over the country, from sea to sea. The word "separation" is the same in English and French. And it's pronounced just as well with the accent of the British Columbia elite, rich Alberta cowboys, humble farmers of Saskatchewan and disillusioned fishermen of Newfoundland and Labrador. Although they are marginal, some western separatists have even founded their own political party. Disunited States of Canada, a documentary by the producers of Gentilly Or Not To Be, set off to meet these enfants terribles who want to re-draw the borders. These men and women, whom we never hear in the media, express a general malaise from coast to coast and make us examine fundamental questions about our country. What is a country? What is a nation? And what about Quebec?
- -'Chanter plus fort que la mer' is a documentary about one Gaspé family (in Canada), a passion for song. Singing has helped the LeBreux survive isolation and personal tragedies, and they have conveyed their love of music to their entire village of Petite-Vallée. Today, a whole family of artists such as Daniel Bouché, Michel Rivard, Louise Forestier and Richard Séguin meet each year at Petite-Vallée'song festival to hand down their passion to a new generation.
- n the spring of 1957, 40 young Canadian soldiers were sent to Nevada on a top secret mission. These young men did not know they would be used as guinea pigs in the most important nuclear test program of the Cold War.
- -"J'ai la mémoire qui tourne" is a documentary series based on family films and original interviews. Marcel Sabourin plays a projectionist who rediscovers his old films 16 mm and Super 8 at the same time as us. Family film is witnessing our lives over nearly a century.
- The documentary Gentilly Or Not To Be is a reflection about the state of the Quebec' nuclear power plant Gentilly-2.